Gonzalez v. Anthony Case Center

Casey Anthony is set to provide a deposition July 19 in attorney John Morgan's office in downtown Orlando, Florida regarding the defamation lawsuit being brought against her in her civil case. Attorney Morgan acted quickly to prevent the possibility of Anthony fleeing the state upon release and a process server personally subpoenaed Anthony in jail late on the evening of July 6th.

Sources have told WFTV that Casey Anthony boarded a plane at the Orlando Executive Airport at about 3:00 a.m. Sunday morning. WFTV does not know where the plane is headed. Sources, however, did say that the plane has a connection to an attorney formerly on her case.

Casey Anthony walked out of the Orange County jail on Sunday, after nearly three years behind bars. Casey was acquitted on July 5 of first-degree murder in her daughter 2-year-old Caylee Marie Anthony's death.

Exactly where she will go also remains unclear. It was unlikely that she would return to the home she once shared with her parents, as the trial left her family fractured.

Some think she might go to Puerto Rico, where her attorney Jose Baez, has connections. But if she does, Casey probably won't get a warm welcome.

The attorneys suing Casey Anthony for defamation on behalf of her "fake nanny" are going after her psychological evaluations, and also want to know what offers she's received for television appearances and book deals.

The request was filed Wednesday by the attorney for Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez. Anthony told investigators her daughter Caylee was kidnapped by a nanny named Zenaida Gonzalez, but during her murder trial Anthony's defense team admitted the nanny was fictitious and claimed that Caylee actually drowned in the Anthony family pool. Gonzalez is suing Anthony for defamation.

In their latest filing, attorney John Dill said he wants Anthony to produce all documents related to any psychological or psychiatric evaluations.

The attorneys also want Anthony to produce all documents related to offers of "any type" made to her or her representatives for "interviews, television show appearances, movies, books, magazines, newspapers, advertisements, literature...,"reports the Orlando Sentinel.